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The House Of Cobwebs
by
They entered by the back door, which admitted them to a little wash-house. The window was over-spun with cobwebs, thick, hoary; each corner of the ceiling was cobweb-packed; long, dusty filaments depended along the walls. Notwithstanding, Goldthorpe noticed that the house had a water-supply; the sink was wet, the tap above it looked new. This confirmed a suspicion in his mind, but he made no remark. They passed into the kitchen. Here again the work of the spider showed thick on every hand. The window, however, though uncleaned for years, had recently been opened; one knew that by the torn and ragged condition of the webs where the sashes joined. And lo! on the window-sill stood a plate, a cup and saucer, a knife, a fork, a spoon–all of them manifestly new-washed. Goldthorpe affected not to see these objects; he averted his face to hide an involuntary smile.
‘I must light a candle,’ said Mr. Spicer. ‘The staircase is quite dark.’
A candle stood ready, with a box of matches, on the rusty cooking-stove. No fire had burned in the grate for many a long day; of that the visitor assured himself. Save the objects on the window-sill, no evidence of human occupation was discoverable. Having struck a light, Mr. Spicer advanced. In the front passage, on the stairs, on the landing, every angle and every projection had its drapery of cobwebs. The stuffy, musty air smelt of cobwebs; so, at all events, did Goldthorpe explain to himself a peculiar odour which he seemed never to have smelt. It was the same in the two rooms on the first floor. Through the boarded windows of that in front penetrated a few thin rays from the golden sky; they gleamed upon dust and web, on faded, torn wall-paper and a fireplace in ruins.
‘I shouldn’t recommend you to take either of these rooms,’ said Mr. Spicer, looking nervously at his companion. ‘They really can’t be called attractive.’
‘Those on the top are healthier, no doubt,’ was the young man’s reply. ‘I noticed that some of the window-glass is broken. That must have been good for airing.’
Mr. Spicer grew more and more nervous. He opened his little round mouth, very much like a fish gasping, but seemed unable to speak. Silently he led the way to the top story, still amid cobwebs; the atmosphere was certainly purer up here, and when they entered the first room they found themselves all at once in such a flood of glorious sunshine that Goldthorpe shouted with delight.
‘Ah, I could live here! Would it cost much to have panes put in? An old woman with a broom would do the rest.’ He added in a moment, ‘But the back windows are not broken, I think?’
‘No–I think not–I–no–‘
Mr. Spicer gasped and stammered. He stood holding the candle (its light invisible) so that the grease dripped steadily on his trousers.
‘Let’s have a look at the other,’ cried Goldthorpe. ‘It gets the afternoon sun, no doubt. And one would have a view of the garden.’
‘Stop, sir!’ broke from his companion, who was red and perspiring. ‘There’s something I should like to tell you before you go into that room. I–it–the fact is, sir, that–temporarily–I am occupying it myself.’
‘Oh, I beg your pardon, Mr. Spicer!’
‘Not at all, sir! Don’t mention it, sir. I have a reason–it seemed to me–I’ve merely put in a bed and a table, sir, that’s all–a temporary arrangement.’
‘Yes, yes; I quite understand. What could be more sensible? If the house were mine, I should do the same. What’s the good of owning a house, and making no use of it?’
Great was Mr. Spicer’s satisfaction.
‘See what it is, sir,’ he exclaimed, ‘to have to do with a literary man! You are large-minded, sir; you see things from an intellectual point of view. I can’t tell you how it gratifies me, sir, to have made your acquaintance. Let us go into the back room.’